Mykonos
City Guide

Mykonos

Grecia · Best time to visit: May-Oct.

Guide coming in Español, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €85.00/day
Best season May-Oct
Language English
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Athens
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

White Walls to Golden Hour — Every Iconic Moment in a Single Walk

09:00

Mykonos Old Town Labyrinth

Neighborhood
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Step off the harbor promenade and plunge south into the whitewashed maze — within thirty seconds the sea vanishes, the lanes narrow to shoulder-width, and you are inside the most photogenic labyrinth in the Cyclades. At nine the town is still waking up: cats draped over doorsteps, a shutter rolling up on a bakery, bougainvillea blazing electric pink against blinding white walls. The low morning sun rakes sideways through the alleys, carving geometric shadows that disappear by noon. Wander without a map — every turning reveals a blue door, a hidden chapel, or a jasmine-scented courtyard you will never find again.

Tip: The labyrinth was deliberately designed to confuse raiding pirates — do not fight it. Put your phone map away and embrace being lost; every lane circles back to the harbor or a church within five minutes. The narrowest alleys between Enoplon Dynameon and Kalogera streets have the most dramatic shadow play before 10:00.

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10:30

Panagia Paraportiani Church

Religious
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €0

Navigate northwest through the Kastro quarter toward the sound of waves — the lanes open suddenly and there it stands, white against the sea. Five chapels built across four centuries have fused into a single asymmetric form that looks more like a wind-sculpted snow drift than a building. The mid-morning sun from the east lights the main facade evenly without casting the harsh shadows that flatten it at noon, giving you the optimal window for the photograph that defines this island. The interior is rarely open, but the exterior is the masterpiece.

Tip: Do not photograph it dead-on from the front path — walk 20 meters to the left along the low sea wall and shoot from slightly below. This lower angle captures the chapel's impossible curves against blue sky and turquoise water in one frame, the composition that made Paraportiani the most photographed church in Greece.

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11:30

Little Venice

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk south along the waterfront from Paraportiani for two minutes — the stone path narrows between the sea wall and a row of 18th-century merchants' houses whose painted wooden balconies hang directly over the waves. This is Little Venice, the second most iconic image of Mykonos after the windmills. The Aegean crashes against the stone foundations below while you stand close enough to taste the salt spray. Before noon the cafés lining the waterfront are still half-empty and the light is soft on the ochre and blue facades — by 14:00 every seat will be taken and selfie sticks will block the view.

Tip: The classic postcard shot of Little Venice — the full row of colorful houses with waves crashing below — is taken from the rocks at the northern end of the row, near the Paraportiani side. For the wider composition showing the windmills behind the houses, walk to the elevated path on the south side near the Scarpa bar terrace.

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12:30

Gioras Wood Medieval Bakery

Food
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €13

Duck back into the lanes from Little Venice and walk two minutes east — follow the scent of wood smoke and baking dough into a stone-vaulted room that has been firing the same oven since the 1500s, making this one of the oldest continuously operating bakeries in Greece. The interior stays cool even in August. Order the spanakopita — hand-rolled filo layered with spinach and salty feta, still warm from the oven (€4.50) — and a tiropita, the flaky cheese pie that is the definition of Greek fast food done right (€4). Grab a fresh-squeezed orange juice (€4) and eat on the stone bench outside. This is not a sit-down lunch — refuel and keep moving.

Tip: Arrive before 13:00 — the spinach pies sell out daily by early afternoon. The bakery is easy to walk past; look for the low stone doorway with a faded wooden sign on the lane between Matoyianni and the Kastro quarter. Skip the sweet pastries and save room for dinner tonight.

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17:30

Windmills of Kato Mili

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

From anywhere in the southern lanes of Chora, walk toward the waterfront and turn south — the row of white cylindrical windmills appears on the low ridge above the harbor, unmistakable against the sky. You have arrived at the single most iconic image of Mykonos. These 16th-century grain mills once powered the island's economy; today they stand as pure sculptural form against the Aegean. You are here at golden hour for a reason: the late afternoon sun has swung west, backlighting the windmills and setting the sea ablaze behind them. The light on the whitewashed stone turns from white to warm honey to amber as the hour passes.

Tip: Walk past the main cluster to the southernmost windmill and face north — this gives you the full row of windmills with Little Venice visible behind them and the setting sun painting everything gold. Stay until at least 18:30 when the sky turns pink. The flat rocks below the windmills on the sea side are the least crowded perch for the sunset — most tourists cluster on the path above.

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19:00

Niko's Taverna

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €45

Walk seven minutes north from the windmills through the southern lanes of the labyrinth, emerging near the Old Port where Niko's has occupied the same harborside corner since the 1960s. Tables spill onto the narrow lane under a canopy of grapevines and fill fast after sunset. Start with the grilled octopus — charred over coals until the tentacles curl and crisp, finished with olive oil and lemon (€19) — then the lamb chops, thick-cut and pink inside, seasoned with nothing but salt, oregano, and smoke from the grill (€22). A glass of Assyrtiko, the bone-dry white wine born in the Cycladic volcanic soil, is the only pairing you need (€8). Budget €40-50 per person.

Tip: Ask your hotel to reserve a table for 19:00, or walk in at 18:45 to claim one before the post-sunset flood. The whole grilled fish is excellent but priced by weight — confirm the cost before ordering. Avoid the row of restaurants on the harbor's tourist-facing strip west of Manto Mavrogenous Square — they charge Mykonos prices for reheated frozen moussaka and survive on foot traffic, not flavor.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Mykonos?

Most travelers enjoy Mykonos in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Mykonos?

The easiest season for most travelers is May-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Mykonos?

A practical starting point is about €85 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Mykonos?

A good first shortlist for Mykonos includes Little Venice, Windmills of Kato Mili.